Defending Community, Territory, and Indigenous Environmental Relations
This Element addresses a range of pressing challenges and crises by introducing readers to the Maya struggle for land and self-determination in Belize, a former British colony situated in the Caribbean and Central America. In addition to foregrounding environmental relations, the text provides deeper understandings of Qʼeqchiʼ and Mopan Maya people's dynamic conceptions and collective defence of community and territory. To do so, the authors centre the voices, worldviews, and experiences of Maya leaders, youth, and organisers who are engaged in frontline resistance and mobilisations against institutionalised racism and contemporary forms of dispossession. Broadly, the content offers an example of how Indigenous communities are reckoning with the legacies of empire whilst confronting the structural violence and threats to land and life posed by the driving forces of capital accumulation, neoliberal development, and coloniality of the state. Ultimately, this Element illustrates the realities, repercussions, and transformative potential of grassroots movement-building 'from below.' This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.
Product details
August 2025Paperback
9781009454575
75 pages
229 × 152 mm
Not yet published - available from August 2025
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction, Methodology, and Conceptual Framework
- 2. The Maya Struggle for Land, Life, and Self-determination
- 3. The Voice of the Alcaldes: A Dialogue on Maya Struggle
- 4. The Aspirations, Agency, and Resolve of Maya Women
- 5. Maya Youth: Exploring Se' Komonil and Sahil Ch'oolej
- 6. Combatting Colonial Legacies and Climate Injustice
- 7. The Uses, Limitations, and Colonial Paradox of FPIC
- 8. The Costs, Consequences, and Courage of Resistance
- 9. Indigenous Future-making: Defending and Making Life
- References.